Cristiana Grigore on Roma People as Autobiography and Action
Wed, Feb 10
|Online Event
Time & Location
Feb 10, 2021, 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM EST
Online Event
About The Event
As a transatlantic echo of the complex and painful legacies brought forth by the Black History Month, we center the next conversation of our Feraru Conferences Online series on the traumatic journey of another racial minority, the Roma people of Eastern Europe, from their historical emergence in Medieval Europe through the Holocaust to the challenging process of social emancipation and nation-building. Our interlocutor is Cristiana Grigore, the founder of Columbia University’s Roma People’s Project, a leading expert whose scholarship is at once informed by personal experience and in-depth field work.
Facebook premiere on February 10, 2 p.m. New York & Toronto time / 11 a.m. Los Angeles & Vancouver time / 7 p.m. London time / 9 p.m. Bucharest time. Watch also on our website and other social media anytime later.
CRISTIANA GRIGORE is a research scholar of Roma ethnicity and the founder of the Roma People's Project at Columbia University, an initiative aiming to spotlight Roma people and expand Roma studies by examining topics such as identity and stigma, mobility and displacement. She is also the co-founder of Link Education and Practice (LEAP), a nonprofit organization which promotes non-formal education to improve employability. Cristiana earned her BA in Psychology from the University of Bucharest in 2007. As a Fulbright scholar, she graduated from Vanderbilt University with an MA in International Education Policy and Management in 2012. She frequently writes and speaks about Roma people in a global context. Her work has been featured by The New York Times, CNN, Al Jazeera America, NPR, Voice of America etc.
Photo credit: Sandi Horvat